A handbook of figure skating arranged for use on the ice; with over six hundred diagrams and illustrations . ing (from H-H, kindness ofLongmans & Co.)Fig. no, Once-Back with Swing, and forward (side byside); 111, The Rocker-Pass (side by side); 112, Once-Back,with Swing and Pass, and Once-Back with Reverse (sideby side^; 113, The Q_Lock Reverse (Echelon); 114, TheDouble Mercury (face to face). Cf. Fig. 115. The simplest form of side-by-side skating is the outsideedge-roll and the cross-roll forward, then the promenade(varied by the insertion of Mohawks, turns, and changes ofedge), and the once
A handbook of figure skating arranged for use on the ice; with over six hundred diagrams and illustrations . ing (from H-H, kindness ofLongmans & Co.)Fig. no, Once-Back with Swing, and forward (side byside); 111, The Rocker-Pass (side by side); 112, Once-Back,with Swing and Pass, and Once-Back with Reverse (sideby side^; 113, The Q_Lock Reverse (Echelon); 114, TheDouble Mercury (face to face). Cf. Fig. 115. The simplest form of side-by-side skating is the outsideedge-roll and the cross-roll forward, then the promenade(varied by the insertion of Mohawks, turns, and changes ofedge), and the once back and forward (waltzing); of theface-to-face skating, the same rolls (one skated forward, theother backward), the Mercury, the Pigeon Wings, or QScuds. (Figs. 115-117, from M-W. 272, by permission. )66 In the Mercury,one partner skatesOnce-back and f,the other Once-back and b; so thatone is skating thef cross - roll whilethe other is skatingthe b cross - skater who isgoing b pulls hispartner at the turn,who comes roundwith a swish thatis most exhilarat-ing. Many ladieswho are not strong.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidhandbookoffi, bookyear1907